harge57 said:
BlackGoldAg2011 said:
TarponChaser said:
gunan01 said:
0.03% risk of myocarditis in a 5yo based on that study. Not really worth discussing.
Still a Substantially higher risk of myocarditis from the vaccine than a serious Covid case for a 5yo.
i'm not making the argument on whether or not the vaccine is worth while for the age group, but your statement here is demonstrably false. here is a plot of the rate of hospitalization rates by age group. this was the percentage chance of being hospitalized with a confirmed covid case, not the whole population risk.
so even if you take the lowest point, on the 5-17 age group, the risk of myocarditis from the vaccine is less than one tenth the risk of being hospitalized with covid. again, i know both of these are tiny risks, but to say the myocarditis risk from the vaccine is higher is just plain wrong.
This seems like you are missing a probability factor of contracting Covid in the first place.
You are also looking at the rate for 5 to 17. The subgroup of 5 to 11 is much lower.
Additionally there are studies showing the following.
"Approximately 18% of children admitted to hospital needed critical care.2 "
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32960186/
Rough math should be:
Vaccine Myocarditis is 100% x .05% = .05%
Serious covid case is X% who get COVID x .5% x 18% of hospitalizations that actually need critical care
I'm not sure what that X% is but only 300k 5-11 year olds got covid in 2020.
i used the age breakdowns i did because some of my datasets stopped reporting the full age breakdown, so i used what i had. so keeping to 5-17, the 12 month risk of contracting a confirmed case of COVID using the rolling 12 months ending 11/13/2021 was ~8%.
and i'm not "missing" that probability factor, i intentionally let it out because that's not what i was looking at, which is why i clarified what the plot showed. I did that because i wanted to look at "if you get Covid, what is your go forward risk at that point" i left it that way primarily because it's nearly impossible to say what the X% risk is in the future. also, to your 18% i would argue that is possible to have a "serious case of covid" and not need "Critical care". I would say hospitalization is a "serious case" but thats because the word serious is entirely subjective.
and again, i'm not arguing one way or the other for the vaccine, just pointing out, that unless you start introducing a bunch of assumptions to the dataset (some of which may be correct), it is impossible to support the statement "
Still a Substantially higher risk of myocarditis from the vaccine than a serious Covid case for a 5yo." with the data currently available.